Cameron Kusher writes a piece for the website Property Update wherein he talks in depth about the Sydney housing market and what the present trends may mean. Kusher diagnoses the problem using nine indicators.
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Value Growth in Sydney May Come Down
In an article for the website Your Investment Property, Phil McCarroll talks about the moderation in property growth expected in Sydney and Melbourne in the months to come. Experts believe that it may not be wise to predict a complete downturn for the two capital cities but a “moderation in strength” is certainly on the cards.
NSW Expediting Housing Approvals
I recently read an article on Your Investment Property which talked about minimised approval times for new housing and how this change can help streamline projects and cut the cost and time of developing them. This is definitely good news, as red tape oftentimes chokes the project pipelines.
Chinese Property Investors Migrate Towards Non-Banks
An article on Your Investment Property talks about Chinese real estate investors turning to non-bank lending institutions for loans, a migration that can be put down to the unwillingness of banking institutions when it comes to lending money.
Can You Continue Buying Investment Properties?
Writing an article for the website Property Update, Shannon Davis asks when the time to stop thinking about expanding the property portfolio should be. The real estate game, after all, can get addictive. Once property investors begin to understand how the property market can “supercharge their wealth”, there is no looking back. They keep jumping from one property to another in order to increase their wealth base. However, is it an endless lane? Let us find out what Davis has to say.
New Home Sales Figures for 2015-16
An article on the website The Adviser anticipates healthy figures for new home sales in the year 2016. There has been a modest dip in July but it is no reason to worry. Sale of detached dwellings has come up by 0.7% in the month running up to July. However, it has fallen 2.8% in three months leading to July and this brings the figure, 3.4% below what it was at the same time last year.
While the indicators do not point towards a phenomenal 2016, there are good reasons to believe that the coming year will work out well, cushioned by the good work done in the last three years.
You can read the original article here.